Happy birthday - 100 years today

I used to collect ‘twelves’ on the shipping forecast. If very high winds were forecast on the tv weather report, I would deliberately stay up late to hear the awe inspiring “hurricane, force twelve” on Radio 4. It might have been my imagination but I’m convinced the presenter would unintentionally add gravitas to their voice at this point - though I’m sure they’re trained not to do that.
 
I used to collect ‘twelves’ on the shipping forecast. If very high winds were forecast on the tv weather report, I would deliberately stay up late to hear the awe inspiring “hurricane, force twelve” on Radio 4. It might have been my imagination but I’m convinced the presenter would unintentionally add gravitas to their voice at this point - though I’m sure they’re trained not to do that.
The last time I sat in the boat and listened to twelves was during the Morning Cloud gale, 1974 I think. We heard twelves pretty well every day from Saturday through to Friday while being stuck on the trots in Brightlingsea only about seven miles from our home port that we couldn’t reach.
 
I used to collect ‘twelves’ on the shipping forecast. If very high winds were forecast on the tv weather report, I would deliberately stay up late to hear the awe inspiring “hurricane, force twelve” on Radio 4. It might have been my imagination but I’m convinced the presenter would unintentionally add gravitas to their voice at this point - though I’m sure they’re trained not to do that.

I don't know about training, I think it's normal professional technique. Compare with the cadences of the football results, if they still do that?
 
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